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Printed circuit board

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File:Pcb through hole bottom.jpg
Close-up photo of one side of a motherboard PCB, largen ductive traces, vias and solder points for through-hole components on the opposite side.
ZX Spectrum PCB, showing conductive traces, through-hole paths into the opposite side and element montage

In electronics, printed circuit boards, or PCBs, are used to mechanically support and electrically connect electronic components using conductive pathways, or traces, etched from copper sheets laminated onto a non-conductive substrate. Alternative names are printed wiring board or PWB or etched wiring board

PCBs are rugged, inexpensive, and can be highly reliable. They require much more layout effort and higher initial cost than either wire-wrapped or point-to-point constructed circuits, but are much cheaper, faster, and consistent in high volume production.

History

The inventor of the printed circuit was probably the Austrian engineer Paul Eisler (1907–1995) who, while working in England, made one circa 1936 as part of a radio set. Around 1943 the USA began to use the technology on a large scale to make rugged radios for use in World War II. After the war, in 1948, the USA released the invention for commercial use. Printed circuits did not become commonplace in consumer electronics until the mid-1950s, after the Auto-Sembly process was developed by the United States Army.

Before printed circuits (and for a while after their invention), point-to-point construction was used. For prototypes, or small production runs, wire wrap can be more efficient.

Originally, every electronic component had wire leads, and the PCB had holes drilled for each wire of each component. The components' leads were then passed through the holes and soldered to the PCB trace. This method of assembly is called through-hole construction. In 1949, Moe Abramson and Stanilus F. Danko of the United States Army Signal Corps developed the Auto-Sembly process in which component leads were inserted into a copper foil interconnection pattern and dip soldered. With the development of board lamination and etching techniques, this concept evolved into the standard printed circuit board fabrication process in use today. Soldering could be done automatically by passing the board over a ripple, or wave, of molten solder in a wave-soldering machine.

However, the wires and holes are wasteful. It costs money to drill the holes, and the protruding wires are merely cut off.

Instead of using through-hole parts, often 'surface mount' parts are used instead. See Surface-mount technology below.

Physical composition

Most PCBs are composed of between one and sixteen conductive layers separated and supported by layers of insulating material (substrates) laminated (glued) together.

Layers may be connected together through drilled holes called vias. Either the holes are electroplated or small rivets are inserted. High-density PCBs may have blind vias, which are visible only on one surface, or buried vias, which are visible on neither.

Substrates

Low-end consumer grade PCB substrates frequently are made of paper impregnated with phenolic resin, sometimes branded "Pertinax". They carry designations such as XXXP, XXXPC, and FR-2. The material is inexpensive, easy to machine by drilling, shearing and cold punching, and causes less tool wear than glass fiber reinforced substrates. The letters "FR" in the designation indicate Flame Resistance.

High-end consumer and industrial circuit board substrates are typically made of a material designated FR-4. This consists of a woven fiberglass mat impregnated with a flame resistant epoxy resin. It can be drilled, punched and sheared, but due to its abrasive glass content requires tools made of tungsten carbide for high volume production. Due to the fiberglass reinforcement, it exhibits about five times higher flexural strength and resistance to cracking than paper-phenolic types, albeit at higher cost.

PCBs for high power radio frequency (RF) work use plastics with low dielectric constant (permittivity) and dissipation factor, such as Rogers® 4000, Rogers® Duroid, DuPont® Teflon® (types GT and GX), polyimide, polystyrene and cross-linked polystyrene. They typically have poorer mechanical properties, but this is considered an acceptable engineering tradeoff in view of their superior electrical performance.

PCBs designed for use in vacuum or in zero gravity, as in spacecraft, being unable to rely on convection cooling, often have thick copper or aluminum cores to dissipate heat from electrical components.

Not all circuit boards use rigid core materials. Some are designed to be very or slightly flexible, using DuPont's® Kapton® polyimide film, and others. This class of boards, sometimes called flex circuits, or rigid-flex circuits, respectively, are difficult to create but have many applications. Sometimes they are flexible to save space (PCBs inside cameras and hearing aids are almost always made of flex circuits so they can be folded up to fit into the limited available space). Sometimes, the flexible part of the circuit board is actually being used as a cable or moving connection to another board or device. One example of the latter application is the cable connected to the carriage in an inkjet printer.

Power electronic applications require low-thermal resisivity substrates, with thick copper track to carry high currents. The main technology are ceramic-based substrates (Direct Bonded Copper) and metal-based substrates (Insulated Metal Substrate).

Design

Usually an electronics or electrical engineer designs the circuit, and a layout specialist designs the PCB. The designer must obey numerous PCB layout guidelines to design a PCB that functions correctly, yet is inexpensive to manufacture.

Electronic Design Automation (EDA)

PCB designers often use electronic design automation to produce a layout. The EDA program stores design information, facilitates editing the design, and can also automate repetitive design tasks.

The first stage is converting the circuit schematic into a net list. The net list is conceptually a list of component pins and the circuit nodes, or nets, that each pin connects to. Often the schematic capture EDA program, operated by a circuit design engineer, is responsible for netlist generation, and the netlist is imported into the PCB layout program.

The next step is to decide the position of each device. The easy way to do this is to specify a grid of lettered rows and numbered columns where the devices should go. The computer then assigns pin 1 of each device in the bill of materials to a grid location. Typically, the operator may assist the automated placement routine by specifying rooms, or specific regions of the board, where certain groups of components should be placed. For example, the parts associated with a power supply subcircuit might be assigned to a region near the power input connector. In other cases devices may be manually placed, either to optimize the electrical performance of the circuit, or to place components such as knobs, switches, and connectors as required by the mechanical design of the system.

The computer then explodes the device list into a complete pin list for the board by using templates from a library of footprints associated with each type of device. Each footprint is a map of a device's pins, usually with a recommended pad and drill hole layout for each device. The library allows the footprint to be drawn only once, and then shared by all devices of that type.

In some systems, high-current pads are identified in the device library, and the associated nets are flagged for attention by the pcb designer. High current runs require wider traces, and the designer or circuit design engineer usually decides the width.


The computer program then merges the netlist (sorted by pin name) with the pin list (sorted by pin name), transferring the physical coordinates of the pin list to the netlist. The netlist is then resorted, by net name.

Some systems can optimize the design by swapping the positions of parts and logic gates to reduce the length of copper runs. Some systems also automatically discover power pins in the devices, and generate runs or vias to the nearest power plane or conductor.

The programs then try to route each net in the signal-pin list, finding some sequence of connections in the available layers. Often layers are assigned to power and ground, with one layer to vertical, and another to horizontal wires. The power layers shield the circuits from noise.

The routing problem is equivalent to the travelling salesman problem, and is therefore NP complete, and therefore not amenable to a perfect solution. One practical routing algorithm is to pick the pin farthest from the center of the board, then use a greedy algorithm to select the next-nearest pin with the same signal name.

After automated routing, usually there is a list of nets that must be manually routed.

Once routed, the system may have a series of strategy subroutines to reduce the production cost of the PCB. For example, one routine might remove unneeded vias (each via is a drill hole, and costs money to make). Another might round edges of conductor runs, and widen or move runs apart to maintain safe spacing. Another strategy might adjust large copper areas so that they form nets, or large blank areas may get unconnected "checks" of copper. The nets and checks reduce pollution by extending the life of the etchant batch, and speed production by evening-out the copper concentration in the etching bath.

Some systems provide design rule checking to validate the design for electrical connectivity and clearance, rules for board manufacture, assembly and test, heat flow and other errors.

The silk-screen, solder mask, and solder paste stencil(s) are often designed as auxiliary layers.

Finally, the copper layers are then converted to Gerber files, a format of numerical control file for a photoplotter. Historically, an additional aperture file was required to link each numerically designated aperture referred to in the Gerber file with an actual shape to be plotted. Newer Gerber files embed the aperture information in the Gerber file itself. The hole locations are encoded in drill files. The drill files may be sorted to minimize drill-head movement time, and bit changes.

Manufacturing

Patterning

The vast majority of 'printed circuit boards' are made by adhering a layer of copper over the entire substrate, sometimes on both sides, (creating a "blank PCB") then removing unwanted copper after applying a temporary mask (e.g. by etching in ferric chloride), leaving only the desired copper traces. A few PCBs are made by adding traces to the bare substrate usually by a complex process of multiple electroplating. After the circuit board has been manufactured, components are connected to the traces by soldering them to the board.

There are three common methods used for the production of printed circuit boards:

  1. Silk screen printing uses etch-resistant inks to protect the copper foil. Subsequent etching removes the unwanted copper. Alternatively, the ink may be conductive, printed on a blank (non-conductive) board. The latter technique is also used in the manufacture of hybrid circuits.
  2. Photoengraving uses a photomask and chemical etching to remove the copper foil from the substrate. The photomask is usually prepared with a photoplotter from data produced by a technician using computer-aided PCB design software. Laser-printed transparencies are sometimes employed for low-resolution photoplots.[1]
  3. PCB Milling uses a 2 or 3 axis mechanical milling system to mill away the copper foil from the substrate. A PCB milling machine (referred to as a 'PCB Prototyper') operates in a similar way to a plotter, receiving commands from the host software that control the position of the milling head in the x, y, and (if relevant) z axis. Data to drive the Prototyper is extracted from files generated in PCB design software and stored in HPGL or Gerber file format.

Lamination

Some PCBs have trace layers inside the PCB and are called multi-layer PCBs. These are formed by bonding together separately etched thin boards.

Drilling

Holes, or vias, through a PCB are typically drilled with tiny drill bits made of solid tungsten carbide. The drilling is performed by automated drilling machines with placement controlled by a drill tape or drill file. These computer-generated files are also called numerically controlled drill (NCD) files or "Excellon files". The drill file describes the location and size of each drilled hole.

When very small vias are required, drilling with mechanical bits is costly because of high rates of wear and breakage. In this case, the vias may be evaporated by lasers. Laser-drilled vias typically have an inferior surface finish inside the hole. These holes are called micro vias.

It is also possible with controlled-depth drilling, laser drilling, or by pre-drilling the individual sheets of the PCB before lamination, to produce holes that connect only some of the copper layers, rather than passing through the entire board. These holes are called blind vias when they connect an internal copper layer to an outer layer, or buried vias when they connect two or more internal copper layers.

The walls of the holes, for boards with 2 or more layers, are plated with copper to form plated-through holes that electrically connect the conducting layers of the PCB.

Solder plating and solder resist

The pads and lands to which components will be mounted are typically plated, because the bare copper is not readily solderable. Traditionally, any exposed copper was plated with solder. This solder was traditionally a tin-lead alloy, however new solder compounds are now used to achieve compliance with the RoHS directive in the EU, which restricts the use of lead. Edge connectors, made on the sides of some boards, are often gold plated. Gold plating is also sometimes applied on the whole boards.

Areas that should not be soldered to may be covered with a polymer solder resist coating. The solder resist prevents short circuits between nearby component leads.

Silk screen

Line art and text may be printed onto the outer surfaces of a PCB by silk screening. When space permits the silk screen text can indicate component designators, switch setting requirements, test points, and other features helpful in assembling, testing, and servicing the circuit board.

Populating

In through-hole construction, component leads may be inserted in holes and electrically and mechanically fixed to the board with a molten metal solder.

In surface-mount construction, the components are simply soldered to pads or lands on the outer surfaces of the PCB. Often through-hole and surface-mount construction must be combined in a single PCB because some required components are available only in surface-mount packages, while others are available only in through-hole packages.

Test and validation

Unpopulated boards may be subjected to a bare-board test where each circuit connection as defined in a netlist is verified as correct on the finished board. For high-volume production, a Bed of nails tester or fixture is used to make contact with copper lands or holes on one or both sides of the board to facilitate testing. A computer will instruct the electrical test unit to send a small amount of current through each contact point on the bed-of-nails as required, and verify that such current can be seen on the other appropriate contact points. For small- or medium-volume boards, flying-probe testers use moving test heads to make contact with the copper lands or holes to verify the electrical connectivity of the board under test.

Protection and packaging

PCBs intended for extreme environments often have a conformal coat, which is applied by dipping or spraying after the components have been soldered. The coat prevents corrosion and leakage currents or shorting due to condensation. The earliest conformal coats were wax. Modern conformal coats are usually dips of dilute solutions of silicone rubber, polyurethane, acrylic, or epoxy. Some are engineering plastics sputtered onto the PCB in a vacuum chamber. Mass-production PCBs have small pads for automated test equipment to make temporary connections. Sometimes the pads must be isolated with resistors.

"Cordwood" construction

A cordwood module.

Cordwood construction can give large space-saving advantages and was often used with discrete (wire ended) components in applications where space was at a premium (such as missile guidance and telemetry systems). In 'cordwood' construction, two leaded components are mounted axially between two parallel planes. Instead of soldering the components, they were connected to other components by thin nickel tapes welded at right angles onto the component leads. To avoid shorting together of different interconnection layers, thin insulating cards were placed between them. Perforations or holes in the cards would allow component leads to project through to the next interconnection layer. One disadvantage of this system was that special nickel leaded components had to be used to allow the interconnecting welds to be made. Some versions of cordwood construction used single sided PCBs as the interconnection method (as pictured). This meant that normal leaded components could be used. The cordwood method of construction now appears to have fallen in to disuse probably because high packing densities can be more easily achieved using surface mount techniques and integrated circuits.

Surface-mount technology

Surface mount elements

Surface-mount technology was developed in the 1960s, gained momentum in Japan in the 1980s and became widely used globally by the mid 1990s. Components were mechanically redesigned to have small metal tabs or end caps that could be directly soldered to the surface of the PCB. Components became much smaller and component placement on both sides of the board became far more common with surface-mounting than through-hole mounting, allowing much higher circuit densities. Surface mounting lends itself well to a high degree of automation, reducing labor cost and greatly increasing production rates. SMDs can be one-quarter to one-tenth the size and weight, and one-half to one-quarter the cost of through-hole parts.

See also

References

  • Coombs, Clyde F., Jr. (Ed.) (1995). Printed Circuits Handbook, Fourth Edition, McGraw-Hill ISBN 0-07-012754-9

External links

Printed circuit manufacturing guides

PCB design programs

  • FreePCB - Free PCB layout tool for Windows.
  • PCB – Free PCB layout tool for X11.
  • gEDA – a full suite of Electronic Design Automation tools, freely available under the GPL
  • Kicad – GPL PCB suite
  • EAGLE – used by amateur, but free only for small PCB
  • Cadstar – Comprehensive PCB Design Software Commercial Application
  • Cadstar Express – Free PCB Design Software
  • Altium Designer – The complete electronic product development system
  • Zuken – Leading PCB design software vendor

PCB magazines